Buyers eye managed farmland with one quiet worry: money goes in, but can it come back out? The fear is a one-way door, a lock-in, or a company right that quietly blocks a sale. This page explains exactly how selling and exit work when the land is registered in your own name.
Yes, you can sell Hasiru farmland. The land is registered in your own name, so you are free to sell or transfer it like any property you own. Hasiru holds a right of first refusal, which gives it the first option to buy. If it declines, you can sell to any third party.
You hold individual registered title to your parcel, so the decision to sell is yours. Hasiru’s right of first refusal is a first look, not a lock- it can choose to match a genuine offer, and if it declines you sell to any third party. Agricultural land near Bangalore has an active resale market, and there are no restrictions on who may buy.
Table of Contents
Can I sell my Hasiru farmland?
Yes, you can sell your Hasiru farmland. Because the parcel is registered in your own name through a Sale Deed, it is yours to sell or transfer like any property you hold. Hasiru’s right of first refusal is a first-option step, not a barrier.
Owners are free to sell or transfer their land. Hasiru follows a right of first refusal policy, which means that if you decide to sell, Hasiru is given the first opportunity to purchase the parcel. If Hasiru declines that opportunity, you may sell the land to a third party, with the sale carried out through Hasiru in line with the agreed terms. The right to decide whether and when to sell stays with you throughout.
Why can you sell it freely: what does individual title change?
You can sell freely because you own the specific parcel in your own name, not an undivided share of a larger holding. When title is individual, the decision to sell is yours alone, with no co-owners to coordinate.
Every buyer receives individual ownership through a registered Sale Deed executed in their own name, conveying exclusive title to a specific parcel. Because the buyer holds individual registered title, the land remains theirs regardless of what happens to the company, and it can be sold without anyone else’s sign-off.
This is the sharp contrast with shared ownership models, where a buyer holds an undivided share alongside other investors. In those arrangements, exit is entangled with co-owners, and selling your portion can depend on their agreement or a partition. Individual registered title removes that friction entirely: your parcel is defined, titled to you, and yours to move on your own timeline.
What is a right of first refusal, and does it stop me selling?
No, a right of first refusal does not stop you selling. It gives Hasiru the first option to match a genuine third-party offer when you decide to sell. It is a right, not an obligation, and if Hasiru declines you are free to sell to that third party.
A right of first refusal, often shortened to ROFR, is a contractual first-option arrangement. It is triggered only when the owner decides to sell, not before. At that point the holder of the right, here Hasiru, may choose to buy the parcel on the terms of a bona fide offer, or may decline. If the holder declines, the owner proceeds with the sale to the third party. The right never forces a sale and never blocks one; it simply gives the holder the first look.
That distinction matters, because a first-option right is often mistaken for a lock-in. A lock-in would restrict when you can sell. A right of first refusal does not restrict that at all. It only affects who gets the first chance to buy once you have already decided to sell.
How does the resale or transfer process work?
The process is straightforward. You decide to sell, offer the parcel to Hasiru under its right of first refusal, and if Hasiru declines, you complete the sale to a third party through Hasiru in line with the agreed terms.
In practice the sequence has three simple stages. You give notice that you wish to sell. Hasiru is offered the first opportunity to purchase under the right of first refusal and either takes it or declines. If Hasiru declines, you sell to any third party, with the transaction routed through Hasiru per the terms agreed at purchase. A transfer or gift to a family member follows the same title-based logic, since the parcel is registered in your name. Any specific charges tied to a resale or transfer are confirmed with Hasiru at the point of sale rather than fixed here.
Is there a lock-in period or a buy-back?
Any lock-in terms are confirmed directly with Hasiru at the point of purchase, so check them in your own agreement. Hasiru does not advertise a guaranteed buy-back. Resale works through the right of first refusal and the open market.
It helps to separate two ideas that are often confused. A buy-back is a promise by the company to repurchase your land, usually at a set price or time. Hasiru does not make that promise. A right of first refusal is different: it lets Hasiru choose to buy when you decide to sell, but carries no obligation and no guaranteed price. Stating this plainly, rather than dressing an exit up as a guaranteed return of capital, is the honest position. Where lock-in terms apply, they sit in the agreement you sign, so confirm them directly with Hasiru before you buy.
Buying, Selling, and Reselling: What You Need to Know
You can sell to a wide pool of buyers. There are no restrictions on who may purchase, and both non-agriculturists and Non-Resident Indians are eligible. Agricultural land near Bangalore has an active resale market, so resale is practical, not theoretical.
Although the land conveyed is agricultural in nature, there are no restrictions on eligible purchasers. A wide buyer pool means real resale demand rather than a narrow, hard-to-reach set of buyers. Around Bangalore, agricultural land is actively listed and resold on established property marketplaces, which is direct evidence that a secondary market exists for this kind of asset.
A clean resale needs the parcel’s paperwork in order, and as the owner you already hold it: the Registered Sale Deed, RTC in your name, Encumbrance Certificate, Akarband, Mutation Register Extract, Patta Book and the latest Tax Receipts. Hasiru has operated since 2021, with 100+ acres delivered to 250+ families. For the full picture of the title and documents you hold, read what you legally own when you buy.
Frequently asked questions
Is selling agricultural land taxable?
Sale of land can carry tax implications, and the treatment depends on your circumstances. Tax detail sits outside this page; confirm your position with a qualified tax adviser before you sell.
Can I gift or pass my Hasiru farmland to family?
Yes. Because the parcel is registered in your own name, it can be transferred or gifted to a family member the same way as any titled property you own. The specific documentation is confirmed with Hasiru at the time of transfer.
Is managed farmland a good investment?
That is an evaluative question this exit page does not answer with any return or appreciation claim. For how Hasiru approaches value and trust before a purchase, see the /trust page.
What documents do I need to resell my parcel?
As the owner you hold the Registered Sale Deed, RTC, Encumbrance Certificate, Mutation Register Extract, Patta Book and latest Tax Receipts, which is the set a clean resale needs. The full breakdown is on /what-you-own-when-you-buy-hasiru-farmland.
Can an NRI or non-agriculturist buy my parcel when I resell?
Yes. There are no restrictions on eligible purchasers, and both non-agriculturists and Non-Resident Indians can buy. That widens the pool of buyers available when you resell.
Are there any fees to sell or transfer my parcel?
Any charges tied to a resale or transfer are confirmed directly with Hasiru at the point of sale. This page does not quote a figure, because the specifics are set in your agreement rather than fixed publicly.